Meet the mysterious new characters set to shake up season 2 of You

The stalker series everyone is talking about has been officially renewed at Netflix, and this is what you can expect from the second season.

When You premiered on Lifetime in the middle of 2018 it did so to very little interest or acclaim.

But when the entire first series dropped onto Netflix in December last year it was a different story altogether. Searches for the show spiked on Google and social media was flooded with posts about the series and, in particular, the way it dealt with the narrative of a man whose romantic overtures shifted over the course of the series from courtly to downright creepy.

Joe, played by Penn Badgley, wasn’t a good boyfriend, he was a stalker and a violent murderer. And the object of all his affections, Beck (Elizabeth Lail), was a complicated and, at times, unlikeable female character. In short, the series upended the stereotypical romantic comedy narrative to expose just how toxic the genre has become.

Now that it’s coming back for a second season, based on author Caroline Kepnes’ second novel Hidden Bodies, here’s everything you need to know.

Who is in the cast of You season two?

Anyone who hasn’t made it to the end of You season one, look away now, spoilers lie ahead. For those who have made it, then you know that by the conclusion of the season most of the original cast of You is dead, and at the hands of Joe, too.

Season two of You is going to feature a brand new female lead called, incredibly, Love. She will be played by Victoria Pedretti of The Haunting of Hill House and Quentin Tarantino’s forthcoming Once Upon A Time In Hollywood fame.

Victoria Pedretti

Joining Pedretti and Badgley is Heathers’ James Scully, who will play Love’s brother Forty, a man working his way through a 12-step addiction program. Jenna Ortega from Jane the Virgin will also star in You as teenager Ellie, an ingenious con artist whose tricks and schemes fool the adults in her life.

Who are the new characters in You season two?

There will be two new characters joining the second season of the Netflix thriller, characters that don’t appear in Caroline Kepnes’ original book series.

The first is Sunrise, a stay-at-home “mommy blogger” in Los Angeles raising a toddler with her partner Lucy and the second is Sandy, a mysterious woman from Joe’s past who comes back to haunt him. (Sidebar: Does anyone else think this sounds like the plot of the Blake Lively and Anna Kendrick movie A Simple Favour? Considering how razor-sharp that movie was, we’re not complaining.)

Heathers’ Melanie Field will play Sunrise and Magda Apanowicz, from The Magicians, will take on the role of Sandy. We knew that Joe couldn’t run from his history forever. Here’s hoping that Sandy is ready to serve a big dollop of comeuppance to this awful man.

Also joining season two of You is Charlie Barnett, who you might have seen most recently on Russian Doll. He will be starring as Gabe, the best friend of Joe’s new target Love. We all know how things ended for Beck’s best friend in the first season – spoiler, not well – so our advice to Gabe is to watch his back.

What is the plot of You season two?

After the violent events of season one, You’s second set of episodes opens with Joe leaving behind his past life in New York to start fresh in Los Angeles.

“Joe is not out there looking for love,” showrunner Sera Gamble told EW. “He’s truly heartbroken by what has happened, and so what Love offers is a different kind of friendship and a different kind of relationship.”

Don’t feel sorry for Joe

Unlike Beck, Love is removed from the word of social media and works in a posh food store to pay the bills. (She’s a chef by trade.) And, according to the character synopsis, Love and Joe share a pretty unique bond. “She is also tending to a deep grief, and when she meets Joe, she senses a shared knowledge of profound, life-changing loss.”

Love’s presence is going to radically shift the tone of the series. “[Love] is very warm and there is a carefree aspect to her spirit that really comes from the fact that she has constructed a life for herself that’s about being in the moment and doing what she loves every day,” Gamble mused. “In that way, she’s very very different than the woman that you got to know in season one, Beck.”

But… what about Beck?

Again, spoiler alert for those who haven’t made it to the end of season one, but… Do we think that Beck is really dead?

At the end of season one, Beck has discovered Joe’s nasty box of souvenirs from previous stalker relationships and finds herself imprisoned in his bookshop dungeon. Beck tries and fails to escape, and the last we see of her is Joe looming over her menacingly. Cut to characters talking about Beck’s death and the arrest of her therapist, framed for the murder.

What happened to Beck?

Lail herself seemed to confirm her characters death in an interview with Vulture. “I thought it was gonna be some heroic justice at the end, but it’s more true to life that she does die, unfortunately,” Lail said. “It’s more likely that someone would die in that situation… Poor Penn. It’s just him and no-one else [in season two]. He’s just a one-man show.”

But let’s just be the voice of dissent for a second here: we didn’t actually see her die. There were no shots of a dead body, no hard cut to desolate mourners in the rain at a cemetery. And we hate to say it but… Maybe she might not actually be dead?

It’s the Widows (or literally any superhero movie) rule: if you don’t see them die onscreen, they’re probably still alive. Having said that, we argued the same thing about Bodyguard, apropos of Home Secretary Julia Montague never actually carking it in front of our eyes, and she still ended up being genuinely, properly dead by the end of that series. So take this theory with a grain of salt.

But wouldn’t the surprise return of Beck, quite literally back with a vengeance, make for a fantastic season two of You? (Ed’s note: Beck dies in the book, so there.)

When can we watch You season two?

The series hasn’t started filming yet, so you can assume it won’t hit Netflix until later this year at the earliest.